Protesters want refugee free from oppressive AUS detention. Presented by Lydia Lewis, Radio NZ

Australian protestors gathered outside the Brisbane detention centre calling for the freedom of Hamid, who had been held in a hotel and then the centre for months.

Hamid told RNZ Pacific's Lydia Lewis after almost nine years held offshore in Nauru he feels like the government of Australia is slowly killing him.

Protesters want refugee free from oppressive AUS detention. Presented by Lydia Lewis, Radio NZ

Refugee stories shine on the silver screen. Farid Farid, The Canberra Times

From jam sessions in Manus Island jail cells to an international soccer player ensnared in a fight between governments, Sydney Film Festival is shining a spotlight on the refugees who endured detention to find freedom.

The makers of two Australian feature documentaries screening this week, The Defenders and Freedom is Beautiful, are hoping to move audiences to look beyond their patch by examining the long-standing policy of offshore detention.

Refugee stories shine on the silver screen. By Farid Farid, The Canberra Times

Home affairs asked Labor to extend support for asylum seekers as housing market worsens. By Paul Karp, The Guardian

Cohorts up for review include detainees assessed as a low risk to the community, to who Australia owes a protection obligation, who are stateless, have complex health or care needs, or have been in immigration detention for five or more years.

Home affairs asked Labor to extend support for asylum seekers as housing market worsens. By Paul Karp, The Guardian

Home to Bilo team still fighting for change, 12 months since Nadesalingam family's return to Biloela. By Katrina Beavan, ABC News

Priya, Nades, Kopika and Tharnicaa are now re-established in the community, with a book deal to reveal more about their family's story later this year, limiting media interviews until then.

Home to Bilo campaigner and lawyer Simone Cameron says, "I think the success of the campaign comes down to the fact that we were able to humanise [the family] after such a sustained campaign by successive governments to dehumanise people who seek asylum by sea."

"There's still a lot of work to be done in that space, despite the fact that there's been some really great steps in the past 12 months."

Home to Bilo team still fighting for change, 12 months since Nadesalingam family's return to Biloela. By Katrina Beavan, ABC News

Labor plans to stamp out the exploitation of migrant workers, but it won’t succeed until we treat it like tax avoidance. By Brendan Coates, Trent Wiltshire & Tyler Reysenbach, The Conversation

The exploitation of migrants is widespread in Australia. Our recent report for the Grattan Institute, Short-changed, found that as many as one in six migrant workers are paid less than the national minimum wage, which is meant to be the least a worker in Australia can be paid.

The reforms to tackle migrant worker exploitation are a big step in the right direction. But until we take exploitation more seriously, it isn’t going to stop.

Labor plans to stamp out the exploitation of migrant workers, but it won’t succeed until we treat it like tax avoidance. By Brendan Coates, Trent Wiltshire & Tyler Reysenbach from Grattan Institute, The Conversation

Australia urged to help refugees experiencing 'life and death' situation in PNG. By Lydia Lewis, Radio New Zealand

Professor Sundram, who has conducted extensive research into asylum seeker and refugee mental health, said mental symptoms or mental disorders in refugees held by Australia in Nauru and those left in Papua New Guinea (PNG) continue to deteriorate.

He said Canberra wiping its hands of its responsibility for those still in PNG is not okay.

Australia urged to help refugees experiencing 'life and death' situation in PNG. By Lydia Lewis, Radio New Zealand

'Muzafar Ali: from Afghanistan to Adelaide' on Radio National's Conversations with Sarah Kanowski

Muzafar Ali's first love is soccer, but photography comes a close second. His work, with the UN, took him to remote parts of his homeland, Afghanistan, where he marvelled at the beauty of the rugged landscape and the tenacity of its people. Muzafar made it his mission to capture these precious sights on camera, to give the world a window into an Afghanistan rarely seen. But after a few close calls, Muzafar was forced to flee from his beloved country. His journey to safety would eventually take him to Adelaide. As he set about making a new life with his family, Muzafar was surprised to learn about the long history of Afghan cameleers in Australia. He began a new journey of discovery to meet the descendents of these cameleers, and to share their story.

Further information  Click here for details on screenings of Watander: My Countryman 

To read more about the school co-founded by Muzafar, see Cisarua Learning 

View Muzafar’s photography here

'Muzafar Ali: from Afghanistan to Adelaide' on Radio National's Conversations with Sarah Kanowski

Gleeson to speak to human rights body about scope of torture treaty. Kaldor Centre for International Refugee Law, UNSW

Kaldor Centre Senior Research Fellow Madeline Gleeson will today address United Nations human rights officials about the international treaty that aims to prevent the mistreatment of people deprived of their liberty in any setting, including in immigration detention centres.

Gleeson to speak to human rights body about scope of torture treaty. Kaldor Centre for International Refugee Law, UNSW

Many migrant workers face a 'crisis of exploitation'. Will these reforms end it? SBS News

The federal government has proposed law reform to stop workplaces breaching their responsibilities, which will be introduced to parliament when it next meets.
The proposed changes would make it a criminal offence to coerce someone into breaching their visa conditions, stop employers from hiring people on temporary visas where they have exploited migrants in the past, and increase penalties for employers who do the wrong thing.

Many migrant workers face a 'crisis of exploitation'. Will these reforms end it? SBS News

David Bridie asked 13 people to tell their story. Big things followed. By Michael Dwyer, Sydney Morning Herald

The first ones he mentions are hard truth stories. Freedom by Farhad Bandesh, the Kurdish artist who spent more than seven years in detention on Manus Island, was “very relevant. That’s a big Australian story of the last 20 years.” Bridie’s musical accompaniment is a hesitant, ominous pulse cut with spasms of pained guitar and chilling wails.

David Bridie asked 13 people to tell their story. Big things followed. By Michael Dwyer, Sydney Morning Herald

Afghan women in mental health crisis over bleak future. By Yogita Limaye, BBC World News

"We have a pandemic of suicidal thoughts in Afghanistan. The situation is the worst ever, and the world rarely thinks or talks about it," says psychologist Dr Amal.

"When you read the news, you read about the hunger crisis, but no-one talks about mental health. It's like people are being slowly poisoned. Day by day, they're losing hope."

Afghan women in mental health crisis over bleak future. By Yogita Limaye, BBC World News

‘Last resort’: government faces legal action to force repatriation of Australians from Syrian refugee camps. By Ben Doherty, The Guardian

Australian mothers and children held in a Syrian detention camp will take the Australian government to court in an attempt to compel the government to bring them home. The group members are all Australian citizens and argue they have a legal right to return to Australia.

‘Last resort’: government faces legal action to force repatriation of Australians from Syrian refugee camps. By Ben Doherty, The Guardian

Jail terms for exploiting migrant workers to be introduced in Australian government crackdown. By Daniel Hurst, The Guardian

Australian employers who exploit migrant workers will be banned from hiring other visa holders and will face new criminal penalties, as part of a government crackdown.

The Human Rights Law Centre welcomed the announcement as “a critical shift in the right direction”.

Jail terms for exploiting migrant workers to be introduced in Australian government crackdown. By Daniel Hurst, The Guardian

From upcycled burqas to traditional embroidery, Afghan women are sewing new lives in Australia. By Claudia Taranto, ABC News

Samira Yama was sweating under a blue burqa as she stood in the long queue to cross the border from Afghanistan into Pakistan. It was October 2021, and for the first time in her life the 28-year-old Afghan fashion designer and feminist had been forced to cover her face and body.

From upcycled burqas to traditional embroidery, Afghan women are sewing new lives in Australia. By Claudia Taranto, ABC News

'Take responsibility': first year of AUS/NZ refugee deal will not be met. By Linda Lewis, Radio New Zealand

Thirty-one of the 150 people meant to be resettled by 30 June have arrived so far, INZ has confirmed to RNZ. "The first year ends in July [June 30th], we won't have the 150 because we have just started the work. But we will have 450 in the three-year period," the head of INZ Alison McDonald said.

Refugees who were on Manus Island and are now in Australia can be resettled under the AUS/NZ Agreement. But the 84 who are still in PNG are not included in the AUS/NZ arrangement, INZ said.

"It's been pretty traumatic for those individuals to be stuck there and now told that Australia has washed their hands of them," Graham Thom said.

'Take responsibility': first year of AUS/NZ refugee deal will not be met. By Linda Lewis, Radio New Zealand

Founder of Albany's Karen population reflects on finding a home far from Myanmar and conflict. By Lauren Smith, ABC News

It has been 25 years since Gay Htoo Paw fled his home in Myanmar but he now calls Australia the land of opportunity for education and work, one that is free of conflict.

The 54-year-old was the first Myanmar refugee to move to Albany 13 years ago on Western Australia's south coast, where more than 170 of his people now call home.

Founder of Albany's Karen population reflects on finding a home far from Myanmar and conflict. By Lauren Smith, ABC News